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  • 問題数 90 • 8/28/2024

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    問題一覧

  • 1

    ________ are considered to be the ingredients of arts.

    Elements of visual arts

  • 2

    elements are organized using various tools to make an art, which are called_____.

    The Principle of Art

  • 3

    Historically, the construction of art science through the study of style development was a revolutionary attempt of the principles of arts. Its first publication in______ made a foundational work in formalist art history.

    1915

  • 4

    In fact, the compelling artwork descriptions made it __________.

    Systematic, Subjective, and Remarkable

  • 5

    Elements are arranged to create a feeling of stability in work. It is the principle of art concerned with arranging elements so no one part of a work overpowers, or heavier than any other part. ______ principle is either seen or felt by the viewer.

    Balance

  • 6

    _______ is also known as symmetrical balance. It means two halves are mirror image.

    Formal Balance

  • 7

    ______ is also known as asymmetrical balance. It means two unlike elements seem to carry equal weight. When one side of a composition does not reflect the design of the other.

    Informal Balance

  • 8

    This is a principle of design concerned with diversity._______ is achieved by using different shapes, sizes, and era of in a work of art.

    Variety

  • 9

    ______ is a principle of design used to create the look and feeling of action and to guide the viewer's eye throughout the work of art.

    Movement

  • 10

    This is a principle of arts that shows the quality of how the visual elements are working together in a composition. It is achieved when all elements have unity and cohesion, giving a sense of completion to an artwork.

    Harmony

  • 11

    This is a principle of art defined as the focal point of an image, when one area or thing stands out the most. In order to bring attention to the focal point, subordination is done by minimizing or toning down other compositional elements.

    Emphasis

  • 12

    This is a principle of art concerned with the relationship of one part to another and to the whole.

    Proportion

  • 13

    This is a principle of art that suggests movement or action. It is usually achieved through repetition of lines, shapes, colours, and more.

    Rythm

  • 14

    in art, it is also called harmony. It is when all the elements and principles work together to create a pleasing image. In other words, it is the oneness of an artwork. This principle of art is used by artists to tie a composition together and achieve a sense of wholeness in a piece of art.

    Unity

  • 15

    This is a principle of art that refers to the difference between two things to create interest and tension.

    Contrast

  • 16

    It refers to the main idea that is represented in the artwork. ______ is Basically the essence of the piece!

    Subject of Art

  • 17

    ______are a genre of art that captures scenic view.

    Landscapes

  • 18

    ____is a work that showcases aspects of cities.

    Cityscapes

  • 19

    _____ refer to art works that depict the sea.

    Seascapes

  • 20

    Along with the human form, _____ were subjects of the earliest art ever created. For prehistoric artists, beasts represented food but were also sacred, spiritual beings. _____ remained a vital component of all art in all cultures.

    Animals

  • 21

    study and appreciation of the beauty of the human body in its depiction or presentation.

    Human Figures, Portraits, and Couples

  • 22

    ______ refers to the human figure as the ideal of beauty. His ideal of human beauty implies that a person's face can be beautiful only if its form is consistent with what nature intends in the human face.

    Kant

  • 23

    Painting of scenes from ______, of ordinary people at work or recreation, depicted in a generally realistic manner.

    Everyday Life or Genre

  • 24

    painting or drawing of an arrangement of objects, typically including fruit and flowers and objects contrasting with these in texture, such as bowls and glassware.

    Still Life

  • 25

    This is any artwork that has a Christian or Biblical theme.

    Image of Divinity

  • 26

    It depicts a moment in a narrative story.

    Narration and Historical

  • 27

    It is the attempt to portray the subject as is. The artist selects, changes, and arranges details to express the idea he wants to make clear. The artist main function is to describe accurately what is observed through the senses.

    Realism

  • 28

    It means to move away or separate. The art work is not realistic.

    Abstract

  • 29

    A kind of abstract method where the subject is in misshaped condition.

    Distortion

  • 30

    Subjects are shown in basic geometrical shapes.

    Cubism

  • 31

    Subjects are cut, lacerated, mutilated or hacked.

    Mangling

  • 32

    The subject is lengthened for protraction or extension.

    Elongation

  • 33

    The presentation of an invisible sign such as an idea or a quality into something visible.

    Symbolism

  • 34

    It is an art movement of the 1900s by Henri Matisse, Andre Derain, Raoul Dufy, and George Rouault. Fauve artists used pure, brilliant color aggressively applied straight from the paint tubes to create a sense of an explosion on the canvas.

    Fauvism

  • 35

    A protest movement formed in 1916 by a group of artist in Zurich, Switzerland. They try to provoke the public with outrageous forms of arts.

    Dadaism

  • 36

    Dadaism comes from the French word “Dada” which means___.

    Hobby Horse

  • 37

    A protest movement formed in____ by a group of artist in Zurich, Switzerland. (Dadaism)

    1916

  • 38

    This work aims to capture the speed and force of modern industrial society and to glorify the mechanical energy of modern life.This work aims to capture the speed and force of modern industrial society and to glorify the mechanical energy of modern life.

    Futurism

  • 39

    A protest movement formed in 1916 by a group of artist in _______. (Dadaism)

    Zurich, Switzerland

  • 40

    ______ came from the slang of super realism.

    Surrealism

  • 41

    Surrealism is founded by French poet _____in 1924. It tries to represent fantastic and unnatural themes of higher reality. It aims to create a magical world more beautiful than the real one through art.

    Andre Breton

  • 42

    ______ represent fantastic and unnatural themes of higher reality. It aims to create a magical world more beautiful than the real one through art.

    Surrealism

  • 43

    it can be described as pathos, moridity, violence or chaos, and tragedy

    Expressionism

  • 44

    Expressionism be described as ____.

    Pathos, morbidity, violence or chaos, and tragedy

  • 45

    ____ comes from the Latin word "ars" meaning ability or skill.

    Art

  • 46

    covers those areas of artistic creativity that seek to communicate beauty primarily through the senses.

    Art

  • 47

    The quality, production, or expression of what is beautiful, appealing, or of more than ordinary significance is a ______.

    Work of Art

  • 48

    Art applies to such activities that express aesthetic ideas by the use of _____ in the creation of objects, environment and experiences, which can be shared with others.

    Skill and imagination

  • 49

    Art implies anything accomplished with _____.

    Great skill

  • 50

    _____ refers to the works of art that have developed and accumulated in the Philippines from the beginning of civilization in the country up to the present era.

    Art of the Philippine

  • 51

    _____ reflects to its society and non-Filipinos the wide range of cultural influences on the country's culture and how these influences honed the country's arts.

    Philippine Art

  • 52

    In the 1920s, Fernando Amorsolo and his constituents established the ______.

    Amorsolo School of Painting

  • 53

    (Amorsolo school and students) works were not only seen as paintings, but were widely reproduced in ______.

    All of the above

  • 54

    sculpture, ____ was trained in the academy in Rome.

    Guillermo Tolentino

  • 55

    Guillermo Tolentino became the proponent of ______, as seen in his public monuments and statues.

    Classical Sculpture in the Philippines

  • 56

    the main purpose of a theory of art is ____.

    to treat art like other natural phenomenon that needs to be investigated.

  • 57

    Seeking a theory is better than seeking a definition because human minds cannot find definitions without ____

    Counterexample

  • 58

    ______It is a term used to describe works of art in which the representation of reality is distorted to communicate an inner vision.

    Expressionism

  • 59

    Expressionism was an art movement and international tendency at the beginning of the 20th century, which spanned the visual arts, literature, music, theatre and architecture. The aim of artists was to ______. Expressionism as a theory of art started in 1905, and lasted till approximately 1920.

    express emotional experiences, rather than physical reality.

  • 60

    A good example for Expressionism is the Norwegian artist _____, who was a key forerunner of the Expressionism movement.

    Edvard Munch

  • 61

    In the art world, a _______is any change made by an artist to the size, shape or visual character of a form to express an idea, convey a feeling or enhance visual impact. Exaggerating, twisting, and elongating forms are used to emphasize an intense feeling to do this.

    Distortion Art

  • 62

    At the age of 14, Picasso painted ______ and this justifies the depth and breadth of his ingenuity.

    The Old Fisherman (1895)

  • 63

    an approach used by art critics to examine and evaluate works of art. It is basically one of the oldest methods to evaluate art. This approach is the basis of art criticism that is why artist are driven to learn and improve their natural skills.

    Formalism Art

  • 64

    Artists in Europe adopted realism as a new style of art in the middle of the ______, This art movement transformed the western art world because of its unprecedented attention to everyday subject matter.

    19th century

  • 65

    The function of the artist is to illustrate as accurately and honestly as possible what he observed through his senses.

    Realism

  • 66

    _____art does not attempt to represent an accurate depiction of a visual reality but instead use shapes, colours, forms and gestural marks to achieve its effect.

    Abstration

  • 67

    It can be in a simplified or schematized forms based on object, figure, or landscape.

    Abstract art or abstration

  • 68

    Give me Five Theories of Art

    Expressionism, Distortion Art, Formalism Art, Realism, and Abstraction

  • 69

    What are the Basic Elements of Art

    Line, Shape and Form, Space, Color, Texture, Value

  • 70

    What are the Basic Principles of Art?

    Balance, Variety, Harmony, Emphasis, Proportion, Rythm, Unity, Contrast

  • 71

    What are the Subjects of Art?

    Landscapes, Seascapes, and Cityscapes, Animals, Human Figures, Portraits, and Couples, Everyday Life, Still Life, Image of Divinity, Narration and Historical

  • 72

    What are the Methods of Presenting Art?

    Realism, Abstract, Symbolism, Fauvism, Dadaism, Futurism, Surrealism, Expressionism

  • 73

    Give me an example of Traditional Art.

    Folk Architecture, Weaving, Carving, Folk Performing Arts, Folk Graphic Arts, Folk Oral Literature

  • 74

    Give me and example of Non-Traditional Art.

    Dance, Music, Theatre, Visual Arts, Literature, Film and Broadcast, Architecture and Design

  • 75

    Give me four types of Abstract.

    Distortion, Cubism, Mangling, Elongation

  • 76

    Expressionist Edvard Munch work of Art.

    The Scream

  • 77

    Example of Formalism Art made by Paul Cézanne.

    The Gardener Vallier

  • 78

    Example of Realism made by Gustave Courbet

    The Stone Beakers

  • 79

    An Abstraction work of art made Cossacks was made by____.

    Wassily Kandinsky and Tate Gallery

  • 80

    A mark with length and direction. One-dimensional, varies with width, direction, and length.

    Line

  • 81

    It suggest a feeling of rest or repose. Parallel to the object. Sense of space.

    Horizontal Line

  • 82

    Communicate a sense of height. Perpendicular to the earth.

    Vertical Line

  • 83

    Conveys action and excitement. Restlessness and anxiety.

    Zigzag Lines

  • 84

    Conveys energy

    Curve Lines

  • 85

    _____has only width and height. Teo-dimensional. Provide contour.

    Shape

  • 86

    ___has three dimensions; width, height, and depth.

    Form

  • 87

    Sample Work of texture.

    Detail of Bouquet of Flowers in an Urn, 1724 by Jan Van Huysum

  • 88

    Sample of Line Design

    Mandala, Zentangle, Doodle

  • 89

    Sample of Image of Divinity Artwork.

    Pieta by Michelangelo

  • 90

    Spolarium by Juan Luna is an example of____.

    Narration and Historical